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US1074606A - Fan-blower. - Google Patents

Fan-blower. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1074606A
US1074606A US71992812A US1912719928A US1074606A US 1074606 A US1074606 A US 1074606A US 71992812 A US71992812 A US 71992812A US 1912719928 A US1912719928 A US 1912719928A US 1074606 A US1074606 A US 1074606A
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United States
Prior art keywords
rotor
passage
axis
inlet
fan
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Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US71992812A
Inventor
George W Christoph
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
STERLING BLOWER Co
Original Assignee
STERLING BLOWER Co
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Publication date
Application filed by STERLING BLOWER Co filed Critical STERLING BLOWER Co
Priority to US71992812A priority Critical patent/US1074606A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1074606A publication Critical patent/US1074606A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04DNON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
    • F04D29/00Details, component parts, or accessories
    • F04D29/40Casings; Connections of working fluid
    • F04D29/42Casings; Connections of working fluid for radial or helico-centrifugal pumps
    • F04D29/4206Casings; Connections of working fluid for radial or helico-centrifugal pumps especially adapted for elastic fluid pumps
    • F04D29/4226Fan casings

Definitions

  • This invention relates broadly to centrifugal air and gas pumps and more particularly to a type commonly known as fan blowers and employed for compressing, exhausting or 'transferring air or other gases.
  • My improved blower is especiallyadapted for transferring gases laden with smallgparticles of solid matter, such, for instance, as
  • My invention relates particularly to the construction of the casing encircling the fan or other rotor'andy contemplates the provision of a fair-way through which the gases and solids may pass and be directly acted upon by the rotor, but in which the solid matters may ytravel along a path out of the range of the blades, so as to avoid, or to a large eXtentreduce, the direct contact or impingement of the solid particles ,on the blades or other parts of therotor.
  • This passage in the Vpreferred construction of the casing extends along a curved path around the rotor from an ,approximately tangentially-directed inlet at ⁇ one side of the rotor 'outwardly in a radial direction and laterally in the direction of the axis of rotation to a tangentially-directed outlet.
  • the gases are first acted upon while at the s ide of the rotor, the action being due in part to the frictional contact with the gases between the blades of the rotor.
  • the passage -beo' curve around the axis the solid parwhile tending to continue moving in a straight line, come to ⁇ the outer or peripheral portion ofl the passage., and as the passage curves in the direction of the axis, the
  • the passage constitutes a fair-Way which is largely or entlrely at one side Lof the rotor at the inlet and is largely or' entirely beyond the periphery of the rotor at the outlet.
  • This passage is so formed that the solid particles naturally' tend to follow walls farthest from the rotor.
  • the gases make any sharp angle turn as the tangential inlet and outlet passages are connected by a curved loop whichl merges into both passages.
  • the passage along which the gases and solid bodies travel. upon entering is substantially horizontal and below the axis of rotation and curves up and back over the rotor, so that the wall which constitutes the bottom or tloor ofthe inlet pas- ⁇ along its peripheral wallare at increasing distances from the axis of rotation.
  • litigare l. is ar: edge view of a fan blower constructed in accorda i with my invention. the view beine* taken in the direction of the inlet passage;
  • Fig. Q is a side elevation on somewhat smaller scalo and showing the left-hand side of the fany icc rotor.
  • the rotor may be of any desired character, inasmuch as I do not claim any A
  • the rotor may be driven in any suitable manner, one simple means includes a drive pulley 16 on one projecting end of the shaft 13 and adjacent to the end wall 14.
  • the casing itself-may be made of wood, cast metal or any other suitable material, but is preferably formed of sheet metal and includes a plurality of sections properly securedtogether.
  • the end wall 14 is substantially dat and in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation of the rotor, and may carry a suitable casting 17 forming one journal box for the shaft.
  • opposite end wall includes a central portion 18 and a second or outer peripheral portion 19.
  • the former may be of cast metal and may include a second bearing for the shaft.
  • This central portion is preferably substantially parallel to the opposite end wall 14 .and is spaced therefrom a distance slightly greater than the width of the blades ofthe rotor.
  • the second or outer section 19 lies substantially in the same plane as the central section 18 atone point, for instance, below the axis, and curves helically, that is, in the direct-ion of the' length of the axis until after encircling the axis it is spaced from the plane of the central section 18 a distance substantially equal1 to the width of the inlet or to thedistance between the end wall 14 and the central sect-ion 18.
  • this end wall section 19 curves around the axis, its distance from-the axis varies so that thel portionwhich is nearest the axis is farthest from the plane of the central wall portion 18 and the portion which is in, or substantially in, the plane of said central portion is at a greater distance from the axis than the tips ofthe blades.
  • the central portion 18 is provided with an outwardly-extending peripheral flange 20 disposed at an angle thereto and extending to the adjacent inner edge of the outer wall section 19.
  • This ⁇ iange is of varying height and distance from the axis of the rotor according to the position of the wall section 19.
  • the flange is of gradually increasing height from one end to the other and approaches the center as it increases in height.:
  • the fancasing hasan outer peripheral wall 21 unit-ing the end wall 14 and the outer edge of the wall section 19, said peripheral wall being of varying width as the end wall 14 and the o posite outer wall 17 approach each other.
  • These wall sections inclose the rotor and form the fan casing within which the rotor may freelyfturn. They also define let to the outlet out of the path of the blades of the rotor. This free passage' is, in the preferred embodiment, of substantially uniform cross-sectional area.
  • the ⁇ inlet passage' begins in a rundisposed in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation at one side of the rotor and enters the casing with its lower side substantially tangential with the lower-most tips of the rotor blades so that the passageway is nearer the center of rotation than the tips of the blades.
  • the fair-way will be approximately one-half at the side of the rotor and approximately one-half beyond the periphery of they rotor, but the crosssectional area will remain substantially the same.
  • the inletl is preferably disposed substantially horizontally and enters 4at a point directly below the axis of rotation.
  • the heavy or solid particles carriedalong with the gas will tend to follow the bottom wall of the inlet passage, and this bottom wall becomes the outer or peripheral wall as the passage leads upwardly over the rotor.
  • the tendency of the solid particles moving in a straight line will also tend to keep themV near the wall portion 19, as the latter approaches the plane of the rotor.
  • the resultant tendency will be for the solid parvticles to tend to follow the angle of intersection o the walls 19 and 21, and be blown out of the fan outlet without having come in contact with the rotor.
  • my improved fan casing is especially adapted for handling dust-laden gases, vet at the same time,.it will operate very e ciently as an ordinary blower upon air'or other ordinary gases.
  • a fan blower comprising a rotor and a casing having an inlet, an outlet, and a passage which connects the inlet and outlet, a portion of such passage from inlet to outlet being out of the path of the rotor and of substantially uniform cross-section.
  • a fan blower including a rotor and a casing having a passageway entering substantially tangentially at one side of said rotor and leaving tangentially thereof at the periphery, said passageway at all points along its length' having a portion out of the path of the rotor.
  • a fan blower including a rotor and a casing having an inlet and an outlet, said casing being of gradually increasing radius from said inlet to said outlet and of gradually decreasing width to form a fair-way from said inlet to said outlet through which solid particles may pass Without contact with the rotor.
  • a fan casing having one substantially flat end Wall and the opposite end Wall inclined thereto to provide gradually1 decreasing width of casingfrom the inlet to Vthe outlet, and a. rotor Within'the casing having its axis intersecting the said end Walls.
  • a fan casing having one substantially flat end wall and the opposite end Wall inl clined thereto to provide gradually decreasing width of casing -from the inlet to the outlet, and having a spirally-disposed peripheral wall, and a rotor mounted between said walls.
  • a fan blower including a rotor andA av casing inclosing said rotor and having a passage for the Huid acted upon, said passage encircling the axis of the rotor at gradually increasing "distances therefrom from the inlet to the outlet and said passage gradually extending helically from one side of the rotorfto the planeA of the rotor.
  • a fan blower including a rotor and a casing inclosing saidrotor and having a passage for the fluid acted upon, said passage encircling the axis of the rotor at gradually increasing distances therefrom from the inlet to the outlet and said passage gradually extending helically a distance substantially equal to the width of the passage.
  • a fan blowerl including a rotor and a casing inclosing said rotor and having an inlet passage disposed substantially horiyzontally beneath the axis of said rotor andv extending substantially tangentially to said rotor at oneside of and substantially above the lowermost portion of the rotor.
  • a fan blower including a rotor and a casing inclosing said rotor and having an inlet passage disposed substantially horizontally beneath the axis of said rotor and extending substantially tangentially to said rotor at one side of and substantially above the lowermost portion of the rotor, and having an outlet passage substantially tangential to said rotor below the Same and at one side of said inlet passage.
  • a fan blower including a rotor and a casing having an inlet passage disposed substantially horizontally beneath the axis of rotation, the lowermost sideI of said inlet passage merging -into and constituting a part of the peripheral wall of ⁇ said casing.
  • a fan ⁇ casing having inlet and outlet passages disposed substantially parallel at different distances from the axis of said rotor and in different radial planes.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Structures Of Non-Positive Displacement Pumps (AREA)

Description

G. W. CHRISTOPH.
FAN BLOWER.
APPLIOATION FILED SEPT. 12, 19M.
2 SHEETS-SHEET lv 1,074,606. Patented 0@t.7,1913.
G. W. CHRISTOPH.
FAN BLOWER.
ABPLIGATION FILED sBPT.12, 1912.
Patented Oct. 7, 1913.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2.
" gris t 'mann s'rATEs Parana canin.
GEORGE W. CHRISTOPH, OF HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT, ASSIGNOR TO STERLING BLOWERCOMPANY, F HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT, A CORPORATION OF CON- NECTICUT.
FAN-BLOWER.'
Specicaton of Letters Patent.
Vraamtea oct. 7, rais.
l Application iled September 12, 1912. Serial No. 719,928.
To all whom t may concern Be it -known that I, GEORGE W. Ci-IR'Is- ToPH, a citizen of. the United States, residing in Hartford, Connecticut, have invented the following-described new and useful Improvements in Fan-Blowers.
This invention relates broadly to centrifugal air and gas pumps and more particularly to a type commonly known as fan blowers and employed for compressing, exhausting or 'transferring air or other gases.
My improved blower is especiallyadapted for transferring gases laden with smallgparticles of solid matter, such, for instance, as
the coal dust in producer gas, emery dust from" polishing machines, sawdustfrom wood-working machinery, or the like. By my invention I seek to avoid the direct contact of the solid matter with the blades and bearings of the rotor, and thus avoid the injuries and objectionable abrasive action which these dusts'often have upon the rotor. vIn carrying out my invention, I take advantage of the fact that these particles are heavier than ,the gaseous medium which car ries them, and are more directly influenced by `centrifugal force andgravity.
My invention relates particularly to the construction of the casing encircling the fan or other rotor'andy contemplates the provision of a fair-way through which the gases and solids may pass and be directly acted upon by the rotor, but in which the solid matters may ytravel along a path out of the range of the blades, so as to avoid, or to a large eXtentreduce, the direct contact or impingement of the solid particles ,on the blades or other parts of therotor. This passage in the Vpreferred construction of the casing extends along a curved path around the rotor from an ,approximately tangentially-directed inlet at `one side of the rotor 'outwardly in a radial direction and laterally in the direction of the axis of rotation to a tangentially-directed outlet. The gases are first acted upon while at the s ide of the rotor, the action being due in part to the frictional contact with the gases between the blades of the rotor. As the passage -beo' curve around the axis, the solid parwhile tending to continue moving in a straight line, come to` the outer or peripheral portion ofl the passage., and as the passage curves in the direction of the axis, the
solid particles tend to stay at the side farthest away from the rotor. The passage constitutes a fair-Way which is largely or entlrely at one side Lof the rotor at the inlet and is largely or' entirely beyond the periphery of the rotor at the outlet. At all points along the fair-way there is sufficient freespace out of the path of the blades and along which the solid particles may travel without being in direct contact wit-h the blades, and this passage is so formed that the solid particles naturally' tend to follow walls farthest from the rotor. At no point along t-he passage do the gases make any sharp angle turn as the tangential inlet and outlet passages are connected by a curved loop whichl merges into both passages. Preferably, the passage along which the gases and solid bodies travel. upon entering, is substantially horizontal and below the axis of rotation and curves up and back over the rotor, so that the wall which constitutes the bottom or tloor ofthe inlet pas- `along its peripheral wallare at increasing distances from the axis of rotation.
One embodiment of my invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings forining a part of this invention and to which reierence is to be had.` Inasmuch various changes may be made in details of construction, I wish these drawings considered in an illustrative rather than in a limiting sense.
In the drawings litigare l. is ar: edge view of a fan blower constructed in accorda i with my invention. the view beine* taken in the direction of the inlet passage; Fig. Q is a side elevation on somewhat smaller scalo and showing the left-hand side of the fany icc rotor. The rotor may be of any desired character, inasmuch as I do not claim any A Therotor may be driven in any suitable manner, one simple means includes a drive pulley 16 on one projecting end of the shaft 13 and adjacent to the end wall 14. The casing itself-may be made of wood, cast metal or any other suitable material, but is preferably formed of sheet metal and includes a plurality of sections properly securedtogether. The end wall 14 is substantially dat and in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation of the rotor, and may carry a suitable casting 17 forming one journal box for the shaft. 'Ihe opposite end wall includes a central portion 18 and a second or outer peripheral portion 19. The former may be of cast metal and may include a second bearing for the shaft. This central portion is preferably substantially parallel to the opposite end wall 14 .and is spaced therefrom a distance slightly greater than the width of the blades ofthe rotor. The second or outer section 19 lies substantially in the same plane as the central section 18 atone point, for instance, below the axis, and curves helically, that is, in the direct-ion of the' length of the axis until after encircling the axis it is spaced from the plane of the central section 18 a distance substantially equal1 to the width of the inlet or to thedistance between the end wall 14 and the central sect-ion 18. At the same time that this end wall section 19 curves around the axis, its distance from-the axis varies so that thel portionwhich is nearest the axis is farthest from the plane of the central wall portion 18 and the portion which is in, or substantially in, the plane of said central portion is at a greater distance from the axis than the tips ofthe blades. The central portion 18 is provided with an outwardly-extending peripheral flange 20 disposed at an angle thereto and extending to the adjacent inner edge of the outer wall section 19. This {iange is of varying height and distance from the axis of the rotor according to the position of the wall section 19. In other words, the flange is of gradually increasing height from one end to the other and approaches the center as it increases in height.:
The fancasing hasan outer peripheral wall 21 unit-ing the end wall 14 and the outer edge of the wall section 19, said peripheral wall being of varying width as the end wall 14 and the o posite outer wall 17 approach each other. These wall sections inclose the rotor and form the fan casing within which the rotor may freelyfturn. They also define let to the outlet out of the path of the blades of the rotor. This free passage' is, in the preferred embodiment, of substantially uniform cross-sectional area. The `inlet passage' begins in a rundisposed in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation at one side of the rotor and enters the casing with its lower side substantially tangential with the lower-most tips of the rotor blades so that the passageway is nearer the center of rotation than the tips of the blades. After once encircling the rotor, and, at the same time, traveling axially a distance equal to its own width, its inner side at the outlet is substantially tangential to the lowerxnost tips of the ro-tor bladesand it is entirely in the plane of and out beyond the rotor. At a point midway between, for instance, that shown at the upper side of Fig. 1, the fair-way will be approximately one-half at the side of the rotor and approximately one-half beyond the periphery of they rotor, but the crosssectional area will remain substantially the same. The inletl is preferably disposed substantially horizontally and enters 4at a point directly below the axis of rotation. Thus the heavy or solid particles carriedalong with the gas will tend to follow the bottom wall of the inlet passage, and this bottom wall becomes the outer or peripheral wall as the passage leads upwardly over the rotor. The tendency of the solid particles moving in a straight line will also tend to keep themV near the wall portion 19, as the latter approaches the plane of the rotor. Thus, the resultant tendency will be for the solid parvticles to tend to follow the angle of intersection o the walls 19 and 21, and be blown out of the fan outlet without having come in contact with the rotor. The advantage gained by thus avoiding the impact or contact of the solid matter with the rotor, and the provision of a continuous unbroken passage without the sharp angles or bends, vmore than makes up for any slight loss of etliciency by the presence of a continuous passage out of the path of the rotor blades.-
Although my improved fan casing is especially adapted for handling dust-laden gases, vet at the same time,.it will operate very e ciently as an ordinary blower upon air'or other ordinary gases.
I claim:
1. A fan blower comprising a rotor and a casing having an inlet, an outlet, and a passage which connects the inlet and outlet, a portion of such passage from inlet to outlet being out of the path of the rotor and of substantially uniform cross-section.
l2. A fan blower including a rotor and a casing having a passageway entering substantially tangentially at one side of said rotor and leaving tangentially thereof at the periphery, said passageway at all points along its length' having a portion out of the path of the rotor. v
3. A fan blower, including a rotor and a casing having an inlet and an outlet, said casing being of gradually increasing radius from said inlet to said outlet and of gradually decreasing width to form a fair-way from said inlet to said outlet through which solid particles may pass Without contact with the rotor.
4. A fan casing having one substantially flat end Wall and the opposite end Wall inclined thereto to provide gradually1 decreasing width of casingfrom the inlet to Vthe outlet, and a. rotor Within'the casing having its axis intersecting the said end Walls.
5. A fan casing having one substantially flat end wall and the opposite end Wall inl clined thereto to provide gradually decreasing width of casing -from the inlet to the outlet, and having a spirally-disposed peripheral wall, and a rotor mounted between said walls.
6. A fan blower including a rotor andA av casing inclosing said rotor and having a passage for the Huid acted upon, said passage encircling the axis of the rotor at gradually increasing "distances therefrom from the inlet to the outlet and said passage gradually extending helically from one side of the rotorfto the planeA of the rotor.
7.,A fan blower including a rotor and a casing inclosing saidrotor and having a passage for the fluid acted upon, said passage encircling the axis of the rotor at gradually increasing distances therefrom from the inlet to the outlet and said passage gradually extending helically a distance substantially equal to the width of the passage.
8. A fan blowerl including a rotor and a casing inclosing said rotor and having an inlet passage disposed substantially horiyzontally beneath the axis of said rotor andv extending substantially tangentially to said rotor at oneside of and substantially above the lowermost portion of the rotor.
9. A fan blower including a rotor and a casing inclosing said rotor and having an inlet passage disposed substantially horizontally beneath the axis of said rotor and extending substantially tangentially to said rotor at one side of and substantially above the lowermost portion of the rotor, and having an outlet passage substantially tangential to said rotor below the Same and at one side of said inlet passage.
10. A fan blower including a rotor and a casing having an inlet passage disposed substantially horizontally beneath the axis of rotation, the lowermost sideI of said inlet passage merging -into and constituting a part of the peripheral wall of` said casing.
l1. A fan `casing having inlet and outlet passages disposed substantially parallel at different distances from the axis of said rotor and in different radial planes.
In testimony whereof, I have signed this specification in the presence of two witnesses.
GEORGE W. CHRISTOPH. Witnesses:
ANDREW A. KEENAN, GEORGE A. GRAFF.
US71992812A 1912-09-12 1912-09-12 Fan-blower. Expired - Lifetime US1074606A (en)

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2618223A (en) * 1948-10-21 1952-11-18 Ransohoff Inc N Centrifugal pump housing
US2680409A (en) * 1950-04-19 1954-06-08 Gen Electric Centrifugal pump
US2958293A (en) * 1955-02-25 1960-11-01 Western Machinery Company Solids pump
US2966297A (en) * 1957-07-05 1960-12-27 Essick Mfg Company Blower housing
US3080695A (en) * 1959-12-28 1963-03-12 Mclean Engineering Lab Ventilating apparatus
US3743437A (en) * 1972-04-14 1973-07-03 Cornell Mfg Co Pump impeller with skirt
US4114955A (en) * 1976-09-17 1978-09-19 Toyo Denki Kogyosho Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for transferring material with the use of a fluid

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2618223A (en) * 1948-10-21 1952-11-18 Ransohoff Inc N Centrifugal pump housing
US2680409A (en) * 1950-04-19 1954-06-08 Gen Electric Centrifugal pump
US2958293A (en) * 1955-02-25 1960-11-01 Western Machinery Company Solids pump
US2966297A (en) * 1957-07-05 1960-12-27 Essick Mfg Company Blower housing
US3080695A (en) * 1959-12-28 1963-03-12 Mclean Engineering Lab Ventilating apparatus
US3743437A (en) * 1972-04-14 1973-07-03 Cornell Mfg Co Pump impeller with skirt
US4114955A (en) * 1976-09-17 1978-09-19 Toyo Denki Kogyosho Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for transferring material with the use of a fluid

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